You don’t have to take my word. The judges of the Missouri Press Association’s Better Newspaper Contest awarded Andrew Astleford first place in the best sports feature story category for his writing.

There was another first place for best sports feature story, "A bond thicker than blood," by Columbia Daily Tribune reporter Rus Baer. The contest in some sections is divided in two or three divisions based on newspaper circulation.

There are two pretty fine newspapers in town.

The Tribune won first place in its division for general excellence. It won firsts for news photo and education story. It won two fistfuls of other awards.

The Missourian made a grand showing as well: 29 awards, including 10 first-place prizes and a second-place in general excellence.

Furqaan Sadiq described the worst decline in dairy prices in 25 years through the lives of the Echelmeier family; Laura Herring captured that single moment when Damon Williams hears his guilty verdict and watches his mother leaving the courtroom; and Chad Day and Jacob Barker waded through reams of documents to show what happens — if anything — with the sales tax you pay in a Transportation Development District.

Collectively, these award winners present a picture of the people of mid-Missouri: Our dreams and desires, our problems and possibilities.

Whether that picture is true isn’t something that judges can decide. The awards measure the value other journalists put on these pieces. You, dear reader, hold the most important scale.

Tom

P.S.: Actually, the Missourian won 30 awards. In compiling the list of winners for this letter, it was discovered that one of the winning entries fell outside the contest’s time period. The press association was notified immediately.